Cool Adam - I've enjoyed watching your videos over the past few months. One thing I would have added here is a mention of shutter speed. Oftentimes, especially when you have fast-moving aspects in the frame (cars, people) relative to your framerate, it's a good idea to maintain a shutter "angle" (to borrow a term from cinematography) of about 180 degrees, which means that the shutter is open half the time. Hence, if you are firing a shot every three seconds, optimally you would have a shutter speed of 1.5 seconds (obviously you'd probably have to pick 1 or 2 seconds as most intervolometers don't do fractions of a second) to give a natural amount of motion blur to moving elements in the sequence. Often times you'll have to stop down a lot and potentially use ND filters to get proper exposures with bright scenes, but I find it makes motion much smoother in the final product.
What a great vlog Adam and its one of your trademarks of your landscape vlogs, the beautiful timelapses you render and incorporate into your publications.
Super vlog Adam. Your cinematic skills are amazing and it really adds huge value to your work. I recently watched one of your first vlogs and the quality between then and now is second to none (that's not saying though that your first vlog wasn't great in its on right!). Brilliant work and thanks for sharing.
Thanks for producing a vlog about time lapses utilising the programmes many hobbyist/enthusiast photographers already own: Lightroom and Photoshop. Nice to learn I can try my hand at producing a solid time lapse without purchasing another application. Cheers.
Have always been a big fan of your time lapses mate, thanks very much for the insight. Something I'm looking to start trying to incorporate in to my own videos!
I’ve never done a time lapse, but I’m definitely going to give it a try next time I’m fit enough to go out. It was the thumbnail that attracted me to this video, absolutely stunning shot and would hold its own with anyone on RUclips.
Yeah. Its pretty special when you hit play and see the photo come alive. The light on the mountain that morning was amazing. Glad I decided to go for the time lapse though.
Ilias Dimitriou if you use manual mode and don’t change the exposure you should avoid flicker. I’ve noticed that using the dehaze tool can cause flicker though. I think it’s more of a “smart” effect that analyzes the image content and makes decisions about how to apply the effect. So it can result in different decisions in one frame to the next. So best to avoid dehaze for time lapse. Try and S curve instead. And make sure you don’t let auto white balance get the best of you either (which could be jump around a bit frame to frame). You can overcome that by bumping the wb setting in LR a nominal amount before syncing, which will make sure the other photos take the same temperature (rather than just taking their auto that the camera chose at time of shooting).
I forgot to mention one of the more important ways to avoid flicker. A camera's shutter has a certain amount of timing error. It's a very small amount and varies by camera and other conditions. Let's just call it plus or minus one one millionth of a sec of inaccuracy. If you are shooting at 1/8000s that amount of extra shutter time would be noticeable as it will vary from shot to shot, maybe it's +1/1,000,000 in one shot and it's -1/1,000,000 in the next. The problem is that the error is proportionally significant at very fast shutter speeds (1.6% darker in the second shot). So to combat this tiny variability, try using a slower shutter speed. Doesn't need to be long exposure per se (though that can have a nice effect on your time lapse), but just stopping down a few stops can help get your shutter to the 1/500 sec range (or slower if you can). With that same one millionth of a second of error, it only makes your second frame 0.1% darker, which wouldn't be noticeable. You might want to add a 4 or 6 stop ND if you are in full sun.
@@erikjm please suggest a 20 megapixel camera like 7d mark ii can produce true 4k time lapse video using its raw file, and is there any way to calculate how much resolution video we get using still images. thanks
Thank you so very much for this excellent tutorial how to manage to make the most of a time lapse! I have not yet tried out this but after your YT video you added inspiration for me to go this way! Wishing you all the Very Best always! /Charl
Great little tutorial Adam 👍🏻 Good to know the Photoshop method - I’ve been putting mine together in a very convoluted way with my video editing software so will have to try using Photoshop next time!
Hi Adam great video , one question , Is it possible to do the zoom effect in photoshop or do you use other software to do it?Thanks in advance , keep up the great work
+Dave Baillie I zoom the time lapses in the video editing software. Premiere Pro in my case. I don't think it can be done in Photoshop, although I haven't tried to be honest.
It's a pretty simple concept but harder to do in reality. Just set the camera up and have the time lapse going all night. Use a long interval between each shot by deciding how long you're going to shoot for, how long you want the time lapse to be and what your chosen frame rate is. Challenges include: rain, camera security, battery life, card space etc.
Absolutely great video, I have been a subscriber and really enjoy your still of teaching. I have always wanted to dive into this and I think I am ready. I have a 7d mkII paired with a 24-70 f4l. A couple of questions if I may ask 1- I guess you would set focus then put in manual so that wont change 2- 4k or 1080 lets say you want to upload the video to Instagram what would you do. Thanks for taking them time to make a video and sharing your knowledge.
+david arteaga Hi David. Yes you're right. Manual focus. Instagram does not support 4k videos to my knowledge. You'd just have to burn it down to 1080 first.
Another great tutorial sir! I'he done a few TL with my 7D and my go pro. My question for you is, do you bother using mirror lock up? My intervelometer always jacks up the shots if I use mirror lock up.
Nice tutorial, especially on using the Photoshop and Lightroom programs. One thing that does concern me a bit, (I might have this totally wrong though) When using the intervalometer I imagine that you are using the camera's MECHANICAL shutter? If you use the built in Time lapse option when in the video mode I think this uses the ELECTRONIC shutter? I would prefer to be using the electronic shutter to prevent excessive wear on the mechanical one. It quickly adds to your shot count if you make even just a few 8 second clips if each one is taking 200 shots. Please correct me if I am getting this wrong! Thanks.
Great tutorial Adam. I've done a few time lapses using my GoPro but would like to use my Nikon with better lenses/post options going forward. Quality is much better using RAW images too. As always appreciate the work - loving the drone! Cheers.
Just a very simple scale effect in Premier Pro using keyframes. You need something in the foreground to make a slider effective for landscape time lapses. Or a really long slide.
Hello. Thanks for the tutorial. What are the requirements for creating 4k timelapse? I have a Sony A73 with a 24mp sensor. Can I achieve 4k with this? Cheers :)
Great tutorial Adam. I usually do my aurora timelapses in premiere pro. I never thought of doing it in Photoshop but it does seem a much quicker process. Will try it out next time. :D
For editing I use Gimp for photos and Blender for video/timelapses. Are you aware of how to sync images after editing the first? I have yet to find this option in Gimp, although I will continue researching. As I am retired and on limited income photoshop and LL are not practical for me - that is why I look for free software. Chuck Devlin
Hi Adam, finally got to try these out but unfortunately once I open the 1st photo and clicked image sequence. There was only that photo in timeline and no other. Am I doing something wrong? Thanks and much appreciated
Adam, I’m in Australia and new to LR & PS, I find it hard to follow tutorials online on how to use each of these. I would like to know where I can get books that show you how to use them. I’ve had no luck in Australia as the book shops tell me they are out of print. Any ideas? Thanks Adam
Very good! I have one question, actually2:-) ; 1-. How do you control the flicker between shots and make it look like an actual video? 2-. What would be an easy way to apply the zoom in on the timelapse? Thank you very much for your input:))
hi. should you just do one time laps per a video. what other programs can you use that are not light room free ones or very cheap. what should the min and max lenght of the time lapse be. im sure we dont want to see every ones videos turning up all 8 sec long.
From someone who is solely a stills photographer (and therefore ignorant about the subject), I was just wondering why choose time-lapse above speeded up video? Is it not more work to do it this way or does it produce a result that you prefer for a particular reason??
+Bri W Yes. Doing it with stills you have full control of the RAW images. Editing video is more like editing a jpeg. Its limited, especially with dslr video.
Great tutorial, my Time-Lapse seems to have moving pixilation in it? Not sure why, I converted the RAW to JPEG and followed your steps. Shot on XT3, at f4 to reduce flicker
I'm not a fan of the presentation, but the technique is excellent, straight-forward & quick to employ. Overall, this is the best how-to TL video out there.
Thank you for this video however after I choose 'image sequence' and open, it doesn't become a time-lapse. I've revealed the Timeline and press play but nothing happens. It looks like it's just 1 image and I've already sequenced the time-lapse photos. any idea what the solution is?
Bought the A7rii for 3400 AUD (2500 US) with $500 cashback via redemption the other day. Bought the Sony 70-200mm f4 lens for $1400 AUD (1000 US), which has $200 cashback as well. Overall reallllllly happy with the deal I got, now I just need to learn how to use the camera and your channel is going to help with that a lot, thanks!
Hey Adam. I've been having issues with my daytime/ cloud time-lapse coming out way to choppy and not smooth at all. I've been using the 3 second rule in between shots. Should I be shooting at a slower shutter speed? My old Canon 50D will only go as low as 100 ISO and I'm using double filters to knock down the light for a slow shutter speed. Always coming up with the same frustrating results. Metering in the middle so i get good light gives me about 0"5 shutter speed. Is this still not slow enough? Grasping at straws......Thanks!
+Erwin van den Berg I mainly just ignore it and don’t do anything to prevent it. My Canon 5D and lenses are pretty good so the mechanical inconsistencies are minimal. There might be one or two frames that are a little out but I don’t think it detracts from my story or the time lapse. Any changes in light caused by the conditions, clouds or setting sun, I welcome. I want to capture that in my time lapses.
+Zaber Ansary Yeah its another option. Many of my subscribers are just using Lightroom and Photoshop though. I add it to my project later on in Premiere.
Try LRTimelapse - the tutorial is free. The limitation of the free version is that you can only render 400 images at once (@ 25 fps this works for 16 sec. Timelapses - enough for most needs).
40% of my images were blurry! I think I needed to turn IS off. I also shot on Aperture Priority. Very shaky too, I think the shutter going off was shaking the camera
+Biff Yeager Thanks Biff. I know it's quick but that dynamic feel is part of what makes a video do well on RUclips. Many people will switch off if I pause to take a breath!
Cool Adam - I've enjoyed watching your videos over the past few months. One thing I would have added here is a mention of shutter speed. Oftentimes, especially when you have fast-moving aspects in the frame (cars, people) relative to your framerate, it's a good idea to maintain a shutter "angle" (to borrow a term from cinematography) of about 180 degrees, which means that the shutter is open half the time. Hence, if you are firing a shot every three seconds, optimally you would have a shutter speed of 1.5 seconds (obviously you'd probably have to pick 1 or 2 seconds as most intervolometers don't do fractions of a second) to give a natural amount of motion blur to moving elements in the sequence. Often times you'll have to stop down a lot and potentially use ND filters to get proper exposures with bright scenes, but I find it makes motion much smoother in the final product.
What a great vlog Adam and its one of your trademarks of your landscape vlogs, the beautiful timelapses you render and incorporate into your publications.
+scotty4418 Thanks buddy. Appreciate your comment and support.
Love that fella. A brilliant tutorial on doing time lapse. I learnt so much . Thanks :)
+Paul G Johnson Thanks mate. Appreciate the comment.
This is by far the best tutorial I have found on time lapses, many thanks for your helpful video.
Adam your stuff is the best! thanks for all of these videos!
Another great video Adam! We greatly appreciate all the work you put into these. Truly inspirational.
+D Orr Thanks buddy. Comments like yours help to keep me going.
Thanks for that Adam. I done a series of shots of a boat coming out of Southampton docks and for a first timer did not come out to bad.
Super vlog Adam. Your cinematic skills are amazing and it really adds huge value to your work. I recently watched one of your first vlogs and the quality between then and now is second to none (that's not saying though that your first vlog wasn't great in its on right!). Brilliant work and thanks for sharing.
+Robert Outen Photography Thanks Robert. That's very generous.
Thanks for producing a vlog about time lapses utilising the programmes many hobbyist/enthusiast photographers already own: Lightroom and Photoshop. Nice to learn I can try my hand at producing a solid time lapse without purchasing another application. Cheers.
+AM M'Mullan Appreciate the comment thanks. Its a nice way for photographers to start producing some high quality video content.
Cheers Adam another great tutorial,very informative tried a couple of times myself but gave up, this explains it better
Have always been a big fan of your time lapses mate, thanks very much for the insight. Something I'm looking to start trying to incorporate in to my own videos!
I’ve never done a time lapse, but I’m definitely going to give it a try next time I’m fit enough to go out. It was the thumbnail that attracted me to this video, absolutely stunning shot and would hold its own with anyone on RUclips.
Yeah. Its pretty special when you hit play and see the photo come alive. The light on the mountain that morning was amazing. Glad I decided to go for the time lapse though.
Great vlog Adam, never tried timelapse, but might give it a go now! Liked the sequence at the end of the video.
Of all the tuts, yours is the one where i understand the logic. Thank you so much.
Nice one Adam, clear and informative. Spotted Leeds City Square in there, and some other spots I recognise √
Thanks, Adam. I’ll have to give it a try now I understand a bit more about it.
Some really useful information in here and your time lapses are always excellent, that one with the rain coming in 😍
Thanks buddy. Always nice to get a comment from my first ever subscriber.
One of the best and most informative videos on time lapses. Thank you for making this. Cheers brotha!
This is by far the best tutorial! Thank you!
Great video. Thanks. I had to get my camera out right away to try some of your tips.
Great Video Adam thanks so much for all the time and effort you put into this Channel.
Thanks for the short tutorial Adam ;) never done any time lapse's before , but i'm going to give it a go soon .
Thank you Adam. Good info.
Fantastic tutorial. How do you deal with the flicker. I never see any in any of your videos. Thanks
Ilias Dimitriou if you use manual mode and don’t change the exposure you should avoid flicker. I’ve noticed that using the dehaze tool can cause flicker though. I think it’s more of a “smart” effect that analyzes the image content and makes decisions about how to apply the effect. So it can result in different decisions in one frame to the next. So best to avoid dehaze for time lapse. Try and S curve instead. And make sure you don’t let auto white balance get the best of you either (which could be jump around a bit frame to frame). You can overcome that by bumping the wb setting in LR a nominal amount before syncing, which will make sure the other photos take the same temperature (rather than just taking their auto that the camera chose at time of shooting).
I forgot to mention one of the more important ways to avoid flicker. A camera's shutter has a certain amount of timing error. It's a very small amount and varies by camera and other conditions. Let's just call it plus or minus one one millionth of a sec of inaccuracy. If you are shooting at 1/8000s that amount of extra shutter time would be noticeable as it will vary from shot to shot, maybe it's +1/1,000,000 in one shot and it's -1/1,000,000 in the next. The problem is that the error is proportionally significant at very fast shutter speeds (1.6% darker in the second shot). So to combat this tiny variability, try using a slower shutter speed. Doesn't need to be long exposure per se (though that can have a nice effect on your time lapse), but just stopping down a few stops can help get your shutter to the 1/500 sec range (or slower if you can). With that same one millionth of a second of error, it only makes your second frame 0.1% darker, which wouldn't be noticeable. You might want to add a 4 or 6 stop ND if you are in full sun.
@@erikjm please suggest a 20 megapixel camera like 7d mark ii can produce true 4k time lapse video using its raw file, and is there any way to calculate how much resolution video we get using still images. thanks
thanks this information is gold :)
Great tutorial and super timelapses
Good work Adam, think I'll go shoot a time-lapse tomorrow now. Cheers
Thank you so very much for this excellent tutorial how to manage to make the most of a time lapse! I have not yet tried out this but after your YT video you added inspiration for me to go this way! Wishing you all the Very Best always! /Charl
Fantastic tutorial. Many Thanks
Great video I will have to give this a try now Thank you very inspirational.
Hi Adam. Very helpful. Thank you.
Thanks Adam, great tutorial!
Great video Adam. I've always wanted to try one so maybe I'll get my sorry arse in gear and do one!! I'll let you know how it goes!!👍👍👍👍👍
The best video how to make time-lapse!!
Great stuff Adam. I haven't tried making one yet, but thinking about trying. I'll refer back to this video for a review. Cheers, Jeff
That was a really useful video Adam. No excuse for me not to have a go now
Great video and nice tutorial Adam. I've been toying with doing some proper time-lapses and I think this may just have persuaded me to give them a go
Excellent advice!!
Great little tutorial Adam 👍🏻 Good to know the Photoshop method - I’ve been putting mine together in a very convoluted way with my video editing software so will have to try using Photoshop next time!
+Craig Skinner photography Thanks buddy. Good luck.
nice one adam, ive never done timelapse would like too
+steven peachey It's pretty straightforward to be fair. My method racks up your shutter count pretty quickly though.
well done, straight forward
Fantastic Adam thank you , im a bit late to the party but successfully managed to put a 23 second time lapse together this afternoon.
Great Channel Adam, amongst others found this very useful! Thanks :)
Hi Adam great video , one question , Is it possible to do the zoom effect in photoshop or do you use other software to do it?Thanks in advance , keep up the great work
+Dave Baillie I zoom the time lapses in the video editing software. Premiere Pro in my case. I don't think it can be done in Photoshop, although I haven't tried to be honest.
First Man Photography Thanks for the reply Adam. I thought that you might have to use another program 😒
Nice one Adam. Learnt something new with Photoshop. Cheers 😀
Thanks Adam, I must give this a go soon. cheers.
Got to a problem at 7:23: I can't choose the 'Adobe Media Encoder' setting and I have it installed... Any tips?
Hi added to save for when I get my pc and lightroom can't wait to try this for myself, just started with my canon t7i 👍
Great video. Would you mind sharing how to do time lapses that go from night to day/day to night? A video on that would be amazing.
It's a pretty simple concept but harder to do in reality. Just set the camera up and have the time lapse going all night. Use a long interval between each shot by deciding how long you're going to shoot for, how long you want the time lapse to be and what your chosen frame rate is. Challenges include: rain, camera security, battery life, card space etc.
Absolutely great video, I have been a subscriber and really enjoy your still of teaching. I have always wanted to dive into this and I think I am ready. I have a 7d mkII paired with a 24-70 f4l. A couple of questions if I may ask
1- I guess you would set focus then put in manual so that wont change
2- 4k or 1080 lets say you want to upload the video to Instagram what would you do.
Thanks for taking them time to make a video and sharing your knowledge.
+david arteaga Hi David. Yes you're right. Manual focus.
Instagram does not support 4k videos to my knowledge. You'd just have to burn it down to 1080 first.
Great video Adam, exactly what I was looking for.
Great video, very informative, Adam. Thank you. Now all I have to do is conquer Photoshop and Lightroom!
Hi Adam, do you use LRT Timelapse? If yes, could you do a tutorial on this one as well?
Another great tutorial sir! I'he done a few TL with my 7D and my go pro. My question for you is, do you bother using mirror lock up? My intervelometer always jacks up the shots if I use mirror lock up.
Excellent Adam top job ! 💪
Nice tutorial, especially on using the Photoshop and Lightroom programs. One thing that does concern me a bit, (I might have this totally wrong though) When using the intervalometer I imagine that you are using the camera's MECHANICAL shutter? If you use the built in Time lapse option when in the video mode I think this uses the ELECTRONIC shutter? I would prefer to be using the electronic shutter to prevent excessive wear on the mechanical one. It quickly adds to your shot count if you make even just a few 8 second clips if each one is taking 200 shots. Please correct me if I am getting this wrong! Thanks.
Great tutorial Adam. I've done a few time lapses using my GoPro but would like to use my Nikon with better lenses/post options going forward. Quality is much better using RAW images too. As always appreciate the work - loving the drone! Cheers.
Thanks for the tutorial Adam. How are you adding the zoom to your time-lapse? Slider? After Effects?
Just a very simple scale effect in Premier Pro using keyframes. You need something in the foreground to make a slider effective for landscape time lapses. Or a really long slide.
Hello. Thanks for the tutorial. What are the requirements for creating 4k timelapse? I have a Sony A73 with a 24mp sensor. Can I achieve 4k with this? Cheers :)
Yes easily. Most stills cameras these days have native resolutions much bigger than 4k.
Thank you :)
Great tutorial Adam. I usually do my aurora timelapses in premiere pro. I never thought of doing it in Photoshop but it does seem a much quicker process. Will try it out next time. :D
Do you know of an intervalometer you'd recommend for a canon 6d? =) Good vid by the way!
+Steffen.E The one I listed in the description should be good for your 6D.
It's the wrong plug on it, it would work on my 70d but I already have one for that body=P
I'm sure I'll find something useful with abit of googling=)
For an urban environment with people and cars moving, do you use a ND filter?
+Bengio I don’t use ND for my time lapses. Only a polariser.
Thank you for the answer, great video as usual :)
Great video Adam. Very helpful :-)
Can I shoot a long video file and than just speed it up?
Yes. The quality isn’t quite as good though and you’d obviously need video editing software.
can we do time lapse video with 18-55mm kit lens? Will it be wide enough?
+Seshu Td Yes you can definitely do it with the kit lens. It works at any focal length.
cheers adam, i didn't know that PS could compile an image sequence into a moving image :)
For editing I use Gimp for photos and Blender for video/timelapses. Are you aware of how to sync images after editing the first? I have yet to find this option in Gimp, although I will continue researching. As I am retired and on limited income photoshop and LL are not practical for me - that is why I look for free software.
Chuck Devlin
+Chuck Devlin Hi Chuck. I have been meaning to put a little more time into Gimp. I know a lot of people use it.
Another great video ... 👍👍
Thanks kev.
Hi Adam, finally got to try these out but unfortunately once I open the 1st photo and clicked image sequence. There was only that photo in timeline and no other. Am I doing something wrong? Thanks and much appreciated
Thanks for this really easy tutorial , But how do I add zoom effect in time-lapse ?
Adam, I’m in Australia and new to LR & PS, I find it hard to follow tutorials online on how to use each of these. I would like to know where I can get books that show you how to use them. I’ve had no luck in Australia as the book shops tell me they are out of print. Any ideas? Thanks Adam
What method do you use to get your images and videos onto social media platforms such as Instagram in high quality. Great video btw
Very good! I have one question, actually2:-) ;
1-. How do you control the flicker between shots and make it look like an actual video?
2-. What would be an easy way to apply the zoom in on the timelapse?
Thank you very much for your input:))
Adam , you got your mojo back ;)…… thanks for the quality content as usual
hi.
should you just do one time laps per a video.
what other programs can you use that are not light room free ones or very cheap.
what should the min and max lenght of the time lapse be. im sure we dont want to see every ones videos turning up all 8 sec long.
Can the pictures be exported into premiere elements ? Simply because I don't have Photoshop but do have Adobe video editing
From someone who is solely a stills photographer (and therefore ignorant about the subject), I was just wondering why choose time-lapse above speeded up video? Is it not more work to do it this way or does it produce a result that you prefer for a particular reason??
+Bri W Yes. Doing it with stills you have full control of the RAW images. Editing video is more like editing a jpeg. Its limited, especially with dslr video.
Ah, ok, that makes sense then. Cheers.
+Bri W Appreciate the question. Thanks.
awesome video , thank you :)
Great tutorial, my Time-Lapse seems to have moving pixilation in it? Not sure why, I converted the RAW to JPEG and followed your steps. Shot on XT3, at f4 to reduce flicker
I'm not a fan of the presentation, but the technique is excellent, straight-forward & quick to employ. Overall, this is the best how-to TL video out there.
Thank you for this video however after I choose 'image sequence' and open, it doesn't become a time-lapse. I've revealed the Timeline and press play but nothing happens. It looks like it's just 1 image and I've already sequenced the time-lapse photos. any idea what the solution is?
Bought the A7rii for 3400 AUD (2500 US) with $500 cashback via redemption the other day. Bought the Sony 70-200mm f4 lens for $1400 AUD (1000 US), which has $200 cashback as well.
Overall reallllllly happy with the deal I got, now I just need to learn how to use the camera and your channel is going to help with that a lot, thanks!
I have made time lapses with my phone. Can't do any editing before it start to make the video file. Never tried with my camera yet.
Hey Adam. I've been having issues with my daytime/ cloud time-lapse coming out way to choppy and not smooth at all. I've been using the 3 second rule in between shots. Should I be shooting at a slower shutter speed? My old Canon 50D will only go as low as 100 ISO and I'm using double filters to knock down the light for a slow shutter speed. Always coming up with the same frustrating results. Metering in the middle so i get good light gives me about 0"5 shutter speed. Is this still not slow enough? Grasping at straws......Thanks!
2:50 or use Magic Lantern.
How do you deal with flickering?
+Erwin van den Berg I mainly just ignore it and don’t do anything to prevent it. My Canon 5D and lenses are pretty good so the mechanical inconsistencies are minimal. There might be one or two frames that are a little out but I don’t think it detracts from my story or the time lapse. Any changes in light caused by the conditions, clouds or setting sun, I welcome. I want to capture that in my time lapses.
Thank you
Thanks for the reply.....
Actually one should render the Timelapse in After Effects, you can adjust the image just like Lightroom, can zoom in out or pan ,add audio etc.
+Zaber Ansary Yeah its another option. Many of my subscribers are just using Lightroom and Photoshop though. I add it to my project later on in Premiere.
Try LRTimelapse - the tutorial is free. The limitation of the free version is that you can only render 400 images at once (@ 25 fps this works for 16 sec. Timelapses - enough for most needs).
40% of my images were blurry! I think I needed to turn IS off. I also shot on Aperture Priority. Very shaky too, I think the shutter going off was shaking the camera
How can we do timelapse that zooms ?
Just zoom it in the video editor.
is there any budget friendly software I can use to edit 1000s of RAW files at once?
I tried to export, but for some reason my export to PS is missing.
+xraychick When you're exporting from Lightroom just export jpegs to a folder like normal but with a sequential filename starting from 101.
my sony a68 doesnt have time lapse on it
You can still do it if you can find a compatible intervalometer.
Does time lapse videos mean that we are stationary and everything is moving above us ? Thanks
No but we are stationary. See my Petri Dish Earth vids.
Wow, five years later and the same process still applies.
Great video,think it would be better if you used a screen recorder rather than over the shoulder.
I think the question is if you use LRTimelapse or not ;-)
Great video, but went way too fast. Slow down a touch!
+Biff Yeager Thanks Biff. I know it's quick but that dynamic feel is part of what makes a video do well on RUclips. Many people will switch off if I pause to take a breath!
I am sure that it is true. You give so much in a short ten minutes. It is sad people only have the attention span of a gnat! Keep up the great work.
a very good vlog. my only criticism is you did it too quick. maybe i just old and slow.
Scroll down to the first one? Why not just sort by filename?